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Nature Communications is a peer-reviewed, open access, scientific journal published by Nature Portfolio since 2010. It is a multidisciplinary journal that covers the natural sciences, including physics, chemistry, earth sciences, medicine, and biology. The journal has editorial offices in London, Berlin, New York City, and Shanghai.
Journal Citation Reports (JCR) is an annual publication by Clarivate. [1] It has been integrated with the Web of Science and is accessed from the Web of Science Core Collection. It provides information about academic journals in the natural and social sciences, including impact factors. JCR was originally published as a part of the Science ...
This is a list of journals published by Nature Research. These include the flagship Nature journal, the Nature Reviews series (which absorbed the former Nature Clinical Practice series in 2009), the npj series, Scientific Reports and many others.
Nature Portfolio (formerly known as Nature Publishing Group and Nature Research) [1] is a division of the international scientific publishing company Springer Nature that publishes academic journals, magazines, online databases, and services in science and medicine.
The SCImago Journal Rank (SJR) indicator is a measure of the prestige of scholarly journals that accounts for both the number of citations received by a journal and the prestige of the journals where the citations come from.
The journal is abstracted and indexed in: Astrophysics Data System (ADS) [3] Science Citation Index Expanded [4]; Scopus [5]; According to the Journal Citation Reports, the journal has a 2022 impact factor of 7.9, ranking it 36th out of 274 journals in the category "Environmental Sciences" [6] and 10th out of 201 journals in the category "Geosciences, Multidisciplinary".
Journal ranking is widely used in academic circles in the evaluation of an academic journal's impact and quality. Journal rankings are intended to reflect the place of a journal within its field, the relative difficulty of being published in that journal, and the prestige associated with it.
The values for Nature journals lie well above the expected ca. 1:1 linear dependence because those journals contain a significant fraction of editorials. CiteScore was designed to compete with the two-year JCR impact factor, which is currently the most widely used journal metric. [7] [8] Their main differences are as follows: [9]